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Default Adding pair of loudspeakers to B system (newbie question)

"Henrik Johannisson" henrik[.]johannisson[@]telia[.]com wrote in message ...
Hi all!

I'm a owner of a Pioneer VSX-609RDS receiver and on the front speaker
system A
I have a pair of Pioneer S-H510V speakers (8 ohm, 90 dB/W).

Now I want to connect one more pair of speakers. These will then be
connected to
fron speaker system B. My purpose is to have both system A and B activated
at the
same time i.e. I want to hear sound from both A and B at the same time.

If I had understood everything correctly, the speaker pair A and speaker
pair B shall
have the same rating on BOTH impedance and sensivity in order for them to
sound
equally "loud".
But my big question is what ohm ratings the speakers must have in order to
avoid
overload the amplifier. Unfortunately the manual isnt good help : "Please
use
speakers rated between 8 ohm - 16 ohm".

What does that means? If only using system A it is obvious, the speakers
must be rated
between 8 and 16 ohm. But if I add another speaker pair on the system B? I
mean,
shall I see the speaker system A and B in serial or in parallel?!?! I think
I have seen
in some NAD manual that A and B seems to be in parallel.

Example 1:
Assume both A and B speakers are rated as 8 ohm. If A and B is in serial,
the total
will be 8+8=16 and it is within the range.

Example 2:
Assume both A and B speakers are rated as 8 ohm. If A and B is in parallel,
the total
will be 1 / (1/8+1/8) = 4 ohm and we are out of range!

So what should my ohm ratings be!?!?

Please help me!

/Henrik



If the manual says use speakers that are at least 8 Ohms and doesn't
say anything about not using both the A and the B set at the same time
then you should be alright if all 4 speakers are at least 8 Ohms.
There should be a section of the manual with the specifications for
the receiver--it'll have a section with something about the
sensitivity of the FM tuner part and input impedences or levels (in
Volts or miilivolts or microvolts) and stuff like that--and among all
of this should be a section that says that the output of the power amp
part has so many Watts of power per channel and such and it should
list the output or load impedence of the amp per channel. If that
figure is 4 Ohms or lower then you can hook up two 8 Ohm apeakers per
channel with no worries.
It's almost as sure as the sun rising in the east and setting in the
west that setting the receiver to run both the A and the B set of
speakers puts the A speaker and the B speaker for each channel in
parallel, not series.